and most hatcheries still do things by hand.. hatching out hundreds of thousands of chicks a day.. (meat industry).. for them, there is a market for both males and females.. since they all are destined for the dinner table anyway.. I have never walked into a broiler house that had only pullets or cockerels.. every broiler house I have ever been in has all straight run chicks.Most of the hatcheries are not the smaller hatcheries that sell retail, such as the Ideals, Meyers, or Cackles of the world. These hatcheries only represent a fraction of the industry. Most of the eggs are hatched by and for the gigantic commercial egg laying industry which dwarfs the retail retail side of the business. These hatcheries don't sell straight runs, fill small orders, include packing peanuts, etc.
Technology already exists that could easily sort the eggs, by shape, at conveyor belt speed. Sorting technology is already in use by many, many industries and doesn't require people handling individual objects.![]()
the egg sorting machines are used more for the selling of eggs for human consumption.. they have to sort the eggs by grade and check for cracks.. which the machines can do that a lot faster than a person can.. however most hatcheries do not sell eggs for eating.. they are in the business to hatch as many eggs as needed to fill their orders.. two different industries for the two different uses of eggs
lets suppose for arguments sake that the eggs could be sorted by shape in order to sex the chicks.. lets also assume that it works 100% of the time (yeah.. I know.. it's hypothetical.. but bear with me).. so if 50% of eggs produce pullets.. and 50% of eggs produce cockerels.. even if they could afford to invest in some sort of machine to sort the eggs by shape.. they would still have 50% of those eggs to dispose of (and as i stated before.. hatcheries are in the business of selling chicks.. not eggs for eating). In order for them to sell those eggs for eating they would have to meet more standards and also have the machines to clean them to make them fit for the grocery store shelves. Most hatcheries don't want to be bothered with the expense (which they would have to pass on to us).. plus they would have to have separate facilities in order to meet the government regulations.. for them.. especially the smaller hatcheries the cost involved doesn't justify it